The Long Way Round | November 11, 2012

Position: 9°22’S, 140°03’W – Ua Pou

Our route from Manihi to the Marquesas Islands covered 500
nautical miles. The trip should have taken us five days going east. However in
this part of the world, the easterly wind is king and the first rule of sailing
is that you can’t sail into the wind. So it took us 10 days to reach land, alternating tacks between north-east and south-east to travel 900 miles - in essence, we’ve sailed twice
the distance to get here! We grumbled a bit when we found ourselves separated
from fresh meat and beer for yet another few days but there was nothing for it, we just
had to take what we could get, sometimes making just 75 miles of easting a day.

First glimpse of Ua Pou

Finally we arrived into Hakahau Harbour on the island of Ua
Pou (pronounced wa-poo) at 0800 on Friday, accompanied on the final mile by a
school of playful dolphins. Our initial impression of the island was that we
were arriving into either Ireland or New Zealand – dramatic peaks towered over
the island and lush, green hills sat between windswept cliffs. Some parts
looked like the Cliffs of Moher, other were like a snapshot of Great Barrier
Island.

However there was no mistaking where we were when we
disembarked to find the France-meets-Pacific way of life that has now become
familiar. People are friendly; the town is kept well with colourful flowers and
clean streets, and includes your standard establishments of the town hall, post
office, church, graveyard and schools. We have observed one distinctive
difference though which makes Ua Pou different to any other island we’ve visited
in French Polynesia to date - everyone seems to have a new Toyota Hilux! Either this is a testing ground for Toyota or someone has found a way to make lots of money from something here.

Our local tour guides

On Saturday we set off to explore the village of Hakahau and
befriended a group of young girls who were spending their weekend climbing
trees to pick fruit and using stones to crack open nuts that they found under
trees. We asked them for directions to a white cross on a hill above the
harbour and with nothing better to do for the afternoon, they took it upon
themselves to give us a personal guided tour to the top.

Along the way, their
many questions gave us an interesting insight into the life of your average 10
year old Marquesan girl – “Are you married? Do you have children? Why don’t you
have children? Do you know how to make children? Tell us how.” While the First Mate swallowed a
smile and wondered how to answer this last one, the ringleader of the group tried
to be of assistance - “It’s ok, you can tell us in English if you don’t know
the words in French”.

One of the girls was particularly keen to try out our
digital camera and take photos of us along the way. We showed her the basics and
she snapped away all afternoon, before reluctantly returning it to us at the
end of our walk. We flicked through the photos over dinner and found that she
was quite the photographer, helped no doubt by her three willing models.

Great photos and post peeps. It looks absolutely beautiful there. Nice to have the local kids as your guides, just shows the difference between girls and boys in the questions they ask - we had boys as our guides in vietnam, self appointed too, and all they wanted to know about was damien duff and david beckham!!Hoping this post will work now. Enjoy the rest of your time on Ua Pou. Suze and Kev